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"This book contains translations of three ancient texts. The first is an explanation of the New Testament Book of Revelation (the Apocalypse) written by the sixth-century (CE) Christian scholar and monastic founder Cassiodorus. The second is a compilation of excerpts from the writings of St. Gregory the Great (died in 604 CE) on the Apocalypse. The original texts of both Cassiodorus and St. Gregory the Great are in Latin. The third text is a compilation of brief excerpts in ancient Greek from ancient writers who can be only tentatively identified on stylistic grounds. The identity of the compiler, too, is unknown. The manuscript of this third text was first discovered in 1911 in northern Greece"--
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Francis X. Gumerlock teaches Latin in the Archdiocese of Denver. He is author of twelve books, mainly translated texts from early and medieval Christianity, including, with David C. Robinson, a translation of the Exposition of the Apocalypse by Tyconius of Carthage, Fathers of the Church 134.
Mark Delcogliano is Associate Professor of Theology at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota, and a translator of numerous patristic works including Gregory the Great on the Song of Songs (Cistercian Publications, 2012). With Andrew Radde-Gallwitz he translated Against Eunomius by Basil of Caesarea, Fathers of the Church 122.
T.C. Schmidt is Assistant Professor of New Testament and Early Christianity at Fairfield University. He has published several books, including The Book of Revelation and its Eastern Commentators (Cambridge, 2021) and Revelation 1-3 in Christian Arabic Commentary (Fordham, 2019).